Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6278721 | Neuroscience | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Thyroid hormones induced rapid changes in phosphorylation in a membrane-containing lysate of synaptosomes purified from adult rat cerebral cortex. The in vitro addition of 3,5,3â²-l-triiodothyronine or l-thyroxine strongly influenced incorporation of label from [γ-32P]-ATP into proteins in a cerebrocortical synaptosomal lysate. Incubation with 3,5,3â²-l-triiodothyronine or l-thyroxine had strong biphasic dose-dependent effects on the phosphorylation of 38±1, 53±1, 62±1, and 113±1 kDa proteins (which we termed α, β, γ, and δ, respectively) and several others. Although we observed differing levels of phosphorylation among the four proteins, doses of 3,5,3â²-l-triiodothyronine or l-thyroxine ranging from 1 to 30nM caused significant dose-dependent stimulation of the phosphorylation of all of them, an effect which occurred within three minutes. In each case, the enhancement of phosphorylation diminished with higher concentrations (100nM-1μM) of 3,5,3â²-l-triiodothyronine. In contrast, incubations with similar doses of 3,3â²,5â²-l-triiodothyronine (reverse l-triiodothyronine) were without significant effect, indicating a specificity for 3,5,3â²-l-triiodothyronine and l-thyroxine. Western blots of synaptosomal lysates incubated with 3,5,3â²-l-triiodothyronine (1nM-1μM) demonstrated phosphorylation at the serine residues of a 112 kDa protein (matching δ) and phosphorylation at tyrosyl residues of a distinct 95 kDa protein. These data support the contention that thyroid hormones have a variety of rapid nongenomic pathways for regulation of protein phosphorylation in mature mammalian brain.
Keywords
ECL3,5,3′-l-triiodothyronineTris-buffered saline containing 0.05% Tween-20N-(2-hydroxyethyl) piperazine-N′-(2-ethanesulfonic acid)rT3Na3VO4TBSTPAGEHRPTBSEGTAPVDFSDSHEPESBSAl-ThyroxineMAPKbovine serum albuminethylene glycol tetraacetic acidpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresisanalysis of varianceANOVApolyvinylidene difluorideCAMsodium dodecyl sulfateSynaptosomephosphotyrosinephosphoserineThyroid hormoneHorseradish peroxidaseG-proteinguanine nucleotide binding proteinProtein kinaseextracellular signal-regulated protein kinases 1 and 2mitogen-activated protein kinaseoptical densityCalmodulin
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Authors
P.K. Sarkar, N.D. Durga, J.J. Morris, J.V. Martin,